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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a same word" is not correct in written English.
The correct expression would be "the same word."
Example: "Please repeat the phrase using the same word you used earlier."
Alternatives: "an identical word" or "the identical term."
Exact(1)
Oligonucleotide occurrences of all sizes between 6 and 8 were counted on both strands, only considering the renewing occurrences (self-overlapping occurrences of a same word were discarded).
Similar(54)
Without this normalization, there would be several variations of a word (same word with different cases Eg: 'Lipitor', 'lipitor'; and same word ending with different punctuation, e.g. 'headache,' and 'headache'headache
So if a person misses a definition, the same word may come up in a different question, several questions later.
Advocates of relative identity will maintain that the relation A is the same word type as B is an identity relation, defined on tokens, that does not satisfy LL. as said of young Oscar and old Oscar.
We considered the same gene with a different transcriptional direction (i.e., up and down) as two different genes (just like a word and the same word with a prefix are two different words, such as boarding and pre-boarding), which led to a corpus of 24,176 words.
In a stadium not too far away, the crowds had shouted the same word a quarter of a century ago to encourage Mohammed Ali to defeat -- to kill -- George Foreman in one of history's great boxing matches.
For the first time, the results indicated that the N170 response elicited by words was larger with a different word as an adaptor relative to the same word as an adaptor.
You can be creative, such as a half line followed by a dot under the same word may mean to draw out the beginning and then cut of the word abruptly.
As Kaplan (1990) has argued, a word can suffer extreme mispronunciation and still be (a token of) the same word.
When the colonel reappears, he says the other linguist said "gavisti" means "an argument," whereas Louise translates the same word as "a desire for more cows".
At his sentencing in 2006 in Federal District Court in Alexandria, Va., he praised Mr. bin Laden and claimed to be "a mujahid" -- the same word Mr. Shahzad used last month in describing himself.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com